﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>DERS - News &amp; Events</title><link>National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events</link><description /><lastBuildDate>Wed, 28 Jul 2010 20:51:36 GMT</lastBuildDate><copyright>Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.</copyright><generator>Pyron Technologies SuiteFin CMS</generator><item><title>7/26/2010: Nancy Berg Selected as Staff Ambassador</title><pubDate>Wed, 28 Jul 2010 20:51:36 GMT</pubDate><description>Nancy
Berg, Assistant to the Director at the Institute for Educational
Research and Service (IERS), was recently selected to join the
2010-2011 class of Staff Ambassadors at the University of Montana.
 
The
University Staff Ambassadors program is a select group of classified UM
employees who participate in a 12-month professional development
curriculum. The program is designed to provide skill development and
internal networking while broadening staff members’ inside knowledge of
UM. 
 
Conceived
in 2009 and sponsored by UM, the USA program offers staff a better
understanding of their value and role within UM and fosters
cross-departmental communication by expanding working relationships.
 
With
more than six years at IERS, Berg has built upon her background in
domestic violence by providing trainings in suicide prevention, and is
a certified trainer of Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training
(ASIST). Berg is a graduate of the University of New Mexico with a BA
in Geography and a Minor in History.
 
For more information about the USA program, or to apply to become a member of next year’s class, please visit the website at www.umt.edu/usa/ or phone Barbara Denman at 243-4662.
</description><link>http://www.iersum.org/National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events?id=375</link></item><item><title>7/20/2010: UM Trauma Conference to Feature NNCTC Researcher</title><pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 2010 16:40:35 GMT</pubDate><description>Richard Manning, award winning local author and Research Associate at the National Native Children’s Trauma Center, will give a presentation for an upcoming conference on abusive head trauma at UM. 
Entitled “Abusive Head Trauma: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Identification, Assessment, Treatment, Investigation, and Prosecution,” the conference is sponsored by the University of Montana School of Social Work in conjunction with the Missoula Shaken Baby Task Force.
The Task Force (www.safebaby.org), estimates that 50,000 cases of shaken baby syndrome occur each year; of those, only about 1,200 are ever reported while one-fourth of the babies die. It is the leading cause of death due to child abuse.
Running from July 20-21 at UM, the conference will include other presentations from Dr. Rich Kaplan and Dr. Dick Patterson of the Children’s Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, along with Craig Barlow who serves as Chief of the Utah Children’s Justice Division.
Manning’s presentation will reflect an ongoing effort among Montana’s education, social work, and mental health professionals to raise awareness of the impacts of childhood abuse and traumatic events upon mental and physical health, academic performance, and life expectancy. 
Complementing the conference as well as his research work at UM’s Institute for Educational Research and Service (which houses the NNCTC), Manning created an online blog called Good Works in Trauma. The blog features articles and commentary on trends, events, and intellectual discussions surrounding trauma, self-care, post-traumatic stress, and other related issues. Visit it online at: www.goodworksintrauma.org. 
Attendance to July’s conference is free, but registration is required, and will soon be available online at www.umt.edu. Continuing education credits are also available for this conference. For more information about the conference, please contact Brenda Westwood at: bwestwood@mt.gov. 
The conference is funded through a grant from the Department of Public Health and Human Services, Child and Family Services Division.
</description><link>http://www.iersum.org/National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events?id=366</link></item><item><title>7/14/2010: NNCTC Director to Present for MACIE, Fairmont Hot </title><pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 18:44:13 GMT</pubDate><description>
Marilyn Bruguier-Zimmerman, Director of the National Native Children’s Trauma Center (NNCTC), was invited to give a presentation for the Montana Advisory Council on Indian Education at their July 14th meeting in Fairmont Hot Springs, MT. 
 
Established by the Montana State Office of Public Instruction and the Board of Public Education, the Montana Advisory Council on Indian Education (MACIE) advises state education officials on matters affecting the education of Indian students in Montana.
 
Bruguier-Zimmerman’s presentation will discuss ongoing work with childhood trauma in tribal communities being conducted through NNCTC. Through her service at NNCTC, Bruguier-Zimmerman provides expertise on childhood trauma as it relates to poor academic achievement, substance abuse, and suicide among Native American children and adolescents. 
 
For more information, contact Rob Harper at (406) 243-5421; to learn more about MACIE, please visit their website at: http://opi.mt.gov/programs/indianed/#gpm1_6.

</description><link>http://www.iersum.org/National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events?id=368</link></item><item><title>7/7/2010: NNCTC Researchers to Co-Author Book Chapter</title><pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 2010 19:54:29 GMT</pubDate><description>STM Learning Inc., a leading publisher
of scientific, technical, and medical educational resources, recently
invited IERS and NNCTC researchers to author a chapter in an upcoming book on
head trauma. Award-winning author Richard Manning, a Research Associate
at NNCTC, along with Richard van den Pol, Director of IERS, were asked
by the book’s principal authors, Dr. Paul Clements and Dr. Soraya
Seedat to co-author a chapter titled “Mental Health Issues of Child
Maltreatment.” The co-authorship reflects a growing interest and body
of work surrounding childhood traumatic stress, evidence-based mental
health interventions, and trauma-aware service systems at NNCTC and
among our professional colleagues within the National Child Traumatic
Stress Network (NCTSN.) With the chapter slated for submission in the
coming weeks, the book awaits a tentative 2011 publication. For more
information, please contact Richard Manning at 406-243-6249.
</description><link>http://www.iersum.org/National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events?id=370</link></item><item><title>6/21/2010: NNCTC featured in IMPACT</title><pubDate>Mon, 21 Jun 2010 21:23:09 GMT</pubDate><description>The recently released summer issue of IMPACT, a quarterly publication of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network, features the National Native Children's Trauma Center. Available online here, the publication features a story on the NNCTC's evolving work with childhood trauma and traumatic stress interventions in Native American communities. "Informed by Training and Personal History: A Native American Confronts Childhood Stress on Reservations," (p. 7) profiles Dr. Aaron Morsette, who grew up on the Blackfeet Reservation in Northwest Montana before launching his career in clinical psychology, which eventually brought him to the NNCTC. For more information about the National Child Traumatic Stress Network, please visit their website.
</description><link>http://www.iersum.org/National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events?id=364</link></item><item><title>4/29/2010: Richard Manning included in annual anthology</title><pubDate>Thu, 29 Apr 2010 20:50:08 GMT</pubDate><description>NNCTC Research Associate and award winning local author Richard
Manning recently had his work included in this year's anthology "Best
American Science and Nature Writing." Titled "Graze Anatomy," the
article looks at the possibilities of restoring the American landscape
by switching to grass-fed beef. It originally appeared in OnEarth magazine, where Manning is a frequent contributor. For a link to the story, click here. Published by Houghton Mifflin, the anthology will be available to the public in October.


</description><link>http://www.iersum.org/National_Native_Childrens_Trauma_Center/News_and_Events?id=347</link></item></channel></rss>